SOULÉ, Pierre, a Senator from Louisiana; born in Castillon-en-Couserans, near Bordeaux, France,
August 31, 1801; attended the Jesuit College at Toulouse and later an academy in Bordeaux; exiled
to Navarre at the age of fifteen for anti-Bourbon activity and worked as a shepherd boy in the
Pyrennes for a year; pardoned in 1818 and returned to school in Bordeaux; studied law in Paris and
practiced; engaged in journalism; imprisoned for publishing revolutionary articles in 1825, but
escaped to England; went to Haiti in 1825, and then to the United States; after travelling around the
nation, commenced the practice of law in New Orleans, La.; member, State senate 1846; elected as
a Democrat in 1846 to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Alexander
Barrow and served from January 21 to March 3, 1847; again elected to the United States Senate and
served from March 3, 1849, to April 11, 1853, when he resigned; chairman, Committee on
Agriculture (Thirty-second Congress); Minister to Spain from 1853 until his resignation in 1855;
author of the Ostend Manifesto in 1854, outlining the attitude the United States should take in regard
to Cuba; resumed the practice of law in New Orleans, La.; was opposed to secession, but abided by
the action of his State; when New Orleans was captured, he was arrested and imprisoned in Fort
Lafayette, N.Y., for several months; paroled to Boston and fled to the Bahamas; travelled to
Richmond, Va., to aid the Confederacy; moved to Havana, Cuba, but subsequently returned to New
Orleans, La., and died there March 26, 1870; interment in St. Louis Cemetery No. 2.